How MLB Pitch Tracking Works: Behind Baseball’s Complex System (2024)

The lifespan of a major league pitch is less than half a second. If that’s difficult to conceptualize, think of the most basic, reductive metaphor for something that happens fast. Then go check the Harvard Database of Useful Biological Numbers and see that, yes, a major league fastball really does go from hand to home plate in the blink of an eye.

How does one accurately capture that?

MLB’s answer is a system of 12 cameras positioned around each ballpark, the source of the data that makes up Statcast. (The optical tracking system is the product of sports tech company Hawk-Eye, best known for making line calls in tennis.) For the last few years, there were five cameras responsible for tracking pitches at 100 frames per second and seven responsible for tracking players and batted balls at a comparatively languid 50 frames per second. But this season brought an upgrade.

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It turned out that 100 frames a second wasn’t quite enough for gathering all the information that MLB desired for Statcast. It wanted more data, faster.

So this season introduced new pitch-tracking cameras that instead capture 300 frames per second. (There are two cameras behind home plate, one by first base, one by third base and one in center field.) These create a veritable biography for each individual pitch, capturing its velocity, spin rate, seam orientation, horizontal and vertical break and more, all in that half second of life.

The results can be easy to take for granted. They’re ingrained in the game at this point: A pitch is thrown, and seemingly immediately “92-mph curveball” or “101-mph fastball” will flash on the scoreboard and TV broadcast. But the process of gathering that information is remarkably complex—and getting more so each year.

Take the camera upgrade this season. The old hardware offered plenty of detail. But there was one area where MLB felt the results were lacking. What about the exact moment the pitch crossed the plate and connected (or didn’t) with the bat? To capture 100 frames a second means losing just milliseconds between snapshots. Yet those milliseconds can be the difference between a whiff and a hit, between making good, hard contact and rolling over on a pitch. Hence the need to up the speed.

How MLB Pitch Tracking Works: Behind Baseball’s Complex System (1)

“At 100 frames a second, even, the bat moves so much between frames that you can’t get a good read on how fast the bat has moved and exactly where it is,” says Ben Jedlovec, senior director of baseball data platform product for MLB. “You have to go to that extra level of granularity, with three times the frame rate, to be able to see where the bat is and to be able to measure how fast it’s moving, when and where, and really understand that bat-and-ball collision—or lack of collision.”

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This level of detail is astounding compared to what Statcast provided even just a few years ago. When the first version of the system was rolled out in 2015, it could not provide the specific release point of a pitch; it simply assumed it based on the change in velocity. (Statcast originally used a combination of radar and cameras, none of which operated at the current speed.) But the current system takes out the need for that kind of guesswork. It provides the exact release point. It gives the spin rate and the spin axis. It even captures the orientation of the seams.

Of the hundreds of thousands of pitches thrown each season, Statcast now misses “only a handful,” Jedlovec says. The errors have gotten smaller over the past few years—mistakes of an inch or two at the plate are now less than a quarter of an inch. (It bears noting that if MLB opts to go to robo umps, it will use Hawk-Eye to make calls.) The league works with the Sports Science Lab at Washington State to conduct ground-truth testing at every ballpark to ensure the system is as accurate as possible.

The resulting data has changed the game in the most literal sense. In some cases, it’s provided a new language for age-old ideas. (Think of how any discussion of lifting the ball now involves the term “launch angle.”) In others, it’s birthed entirely new concepts, with the data responsible for advancements in pitch design and defensive alignment.

“We thought about data as a way to evaluate players,” Jedlovec says of the early days of Statcast. “We didn’t necessarily anticipate—or at least I didn’t anticipate—the way that it would ultimately shift the game.”

Perhaps the most impressive aspect of how Statcast tracks a pitch is that the data is transmitted even faster than the pitch itself. The bulk of the information is communicated and stored as the three-dimensional coordinates of the ball in every frame from every camera. (“We run a pretty high Google Cloud bill every year,” says Jedlovec.) But MLB requests a few specific pieces of data instantaneously. One of those is the speed of the ball as it leaves the pitcher’s hand. “It’s automated to the degree that in 250 milliseconds after that pitch is released, when it’s on its way to the plate, we know how fast that was and we can send it to the scoreboard,” he says.

Or put more simply? “It’s like magic.”

How MLB Pitch Tracking Works: Behind Baseball’s Complex System (2024)

FAQs

How MLB Pitch Tracking Works: Behind Baseball’s Complex System? ›

(There are two cameras behind home plate, one by first base, one by third base and one in center field.) These create a veritable biography for each individual pitch, capturing its velocity, spin rate, seam orientation, horizontal and vertical break and more, all in that half second of life.

How does MLB pitch tracking work? ›

The trajectory component, which consists of three PCs connected to three video cameras, tracks a pitched baseball's flight toward the strike zone. Two cameras observe the baseball, while the third observes the batter to provide proper sizing for the strike zone.

How does the pitch calling system work in MLB? ›

The official website describes the device as a “player-wearable transmitter that allows players on the field to communicate plays to each other without using physical signs or verbal communication.” Catchers can now press a button on the device that relays an audio signal straight to the pitcher's hat.

How do baseball broadcasters know what pitch was thrown? ›

Usage. PITCHf/x is a system using three permanently mounted cameras in the stadium to track the speed and location of a pitched baseball from the pitcher's mound to home plate with an accuracy of better than one mile per hour and one inch.

How does MLB pitch count work? ›

If a pitcher reaches the 110 pitch limit while facing a batter, the pitcher may continue to pitch until one of the following occurs. o The batter reaches base, o That batter is retired, or o The third out is recorded to complete that half-inning or game.

What tracking system does MLB use? ›

How does one accurately capture that? MLB's answer is a system of 12 cameras positioned around each ballpark, the source of the data that makes up Statcast. (The optical tracking system is the product of sports tech company Hawk-Eye, best known for making line calls in tennis.)

How can you tell what pitch is being thrown? ›

A pitch that ends up in the dirt at the end is probably a splitter or a slider. A pitch that dives in a graceful arc is a curveball. A pitch that moves in toward the hitter, or away from the hitter, is probably a cut fastball or a two-seam fastball.

How do you tell if a pitcher is tipping his pitches? ›

Coming Set:

One of the easiest ways to tell if pitchers are tipping their pitches is how they come set. I see pitchers come set at various spots depending on what pitch they're throwing.

How accurate is the K zone? ›

The TV screen shows a graphic of the point at which the ball crosses the plate. That point in space is defined through triangulation. The strike zone is the third plane. When the line of the pitch trajectory intersects the strike zone plane, the pitch location in 3D is determined within accuracy of one centimeter.

What is the most common pitch to be thrown in baseball? ›

The four-seam fastball is the most common pitch in baseball. It is the straightest pitch with the highest velocity. The four-seam fastball is thrown with backspin and sometimes appears to rise, although this is an optical illusion. In reality, it just drops less than other pitches which gives the illusion of rising.

Did Nolan Ryan really throw 235 pitches in a game? ›

This is the story of the Hall of Fame strikeout artist and a ballplayer friend from the dawn of their careers — and the Angels-Red Sox game from 50 years ago that saw Ryan toss a now-unheard-of 235 pitches. Both pitchers were drafted by the Mets in 1965.

Why do pitchers stop at 100 pitches? ›

The pitcher wants to keep the pitch count low to maintain their stamina. Often a starting pitcher will be removed from the game after 100 pitches, regardless of the actual number of innings pitched, as it is reckoned to be the maximum optimal pitch count for a starting pitcher.

What is the fastest baseball pitch ever? ›

The record for fastest pitch ever thrown is held by Aroldis Chapman. While playing for the Cincinnati Reds, he recorded a 105.8 mph pitch on September 24, 2010.

How will the pitch clock work in MLB? ›

The pitch timer is 15 seconds with the bases empty, 20 seconds with runners on base. The timer starts the moment the pitcher receives the ball and stops the moment he goes into his motion. That latter part can be tricky.

How does Statcast identify pitches? ›

We use various tracking metrics to help classify pitches including horizontal/vertical break, velocity, spin rate, spin axis and where the ball is released.

How do pitchers know the strike zone? ›

The official rules of Major League Baseball, define the top of the strike zone as the midpoint between the top of the batter's shoulders and the top of the uniform pants, and the bottom of the strike zone is at the hollow beneath the kneecap, both determined from the batter's stance as the batter is prepared to swing ...

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